Breaking news from the UK: Inquiries by Jonathan Leake at The Sunday Times have revealed new developments in the Climategate affair.
I previously reported about the current predicament:
Loophole in UK FOIA law will apparently allow CRU to avoid prosecution
Now, news from ICO shows that they will seek a change in the law. This communications from the ICO shows what they plan to do.
The actions of scientists at the Climatic Research Unit to thwart Freedom of Information inquiries has prompted the UK Information Commissioner’s Office to seek a change in the law so that it could seek prosecutions against researchers who commit similar offences.
Graham Smith, Deputy Commissioner, said in an emailed press release:
“Norfolk Police are investigating how private emails have become public.
The Information Commissioner’s Office is assisting the police investigation with advice on data protection and freedom of information.
The emails which are now public reveal that Mr Holland’s requests under the Freedom of Information Act were not dealt with as they should have been under the legislation. Section 77 of the Freedom of Information Act makes it an offence for public authorities to act so as to prevent intentionally the disclosure of requested information. Mr Holland’s FOI requests were submitted in 2007/8, but it has only recently come to light that they were not dealt with in accordance with the Act.
The legislation requires action within six months of the offence taking place, so by the time the action taken came to light the opportunity to consider a prosecution was long gone. The ICO is gathering evidence from this and other time-barred cases to support the case for a change in the law. It is important to note that the ICO enforces the law as it stands – we do not make it.
It is for government and Parliament to consider whether this aspect of the legislation should be strengthened to deter this type of activity in future. We will be advising the University about the importance of effective records management and their legal obligations in respect of future requests for information. We will also be studying the investigation reports (by Lord Russell and Norfolk Police), and we will then consider what regulatory action, if any, should then be taken under the Data Protection Act.”
If you need anything further please contact us.
Kind regards,
Gemma
ICO Press Office
020 7025 7580
icopressoffice@xxxx.xxx
www.ico.gov.uk
==========================
But wait there’s more!
Here’s the release on the new Parliamentary inquiry.
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE
Select Committee Announcement
22 January 2010
NEW INQUIRY
THE DISCLOSURE OF CLIMATE DATA FROM THE CLIMATIC RESEARCH UNIT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA
The Science and Technology Committee today announces an inquiry into the unauthorised publication of data, emails and documents relating to the work of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia (UEA). The Committee has agreed to examine and invite written submissions on three questions:
– What are the implications of the disclosures for the integrity of scientific research?
– Are the terms of reference and scope of the Independent Review announced on 3 December 2009 by UEA adequate (see below)?
– How independent are the other two international data sets? (footnote 1)
The Committee intends to hold an oral evidence session in March 2010.
Background
On 1 December 2009 Phil Willis, Chairman of the Science and Technology Committee, wrote to Professor Edward Acton, Vice-Chancellor of UEA following the considerable press coverage of the data, emails and documents relating to the work of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU). The coverage alleged that data may have been manipulated or deleted in order to produce evidence on global warming. On 3 December the UEA announced an Independent Review into the allegations to be headed by Sir Muir Russell.
The Independent Review will:
1. Examine the hacked e-mail exchanges, other relevant e-mail exchanges and any other information held at CRU to determine whether there is any evidence of the manipulation or suppression of data which is at odds with acceptable scientific practice and may therefore call into question any of the research outcomes.
2. Review CRU’s policies and practices for acquiring, assembling, subjecting to peer review and disseminating data and research findings, and their compliance or otherwise with best scientific practice.
3. Review CRU’s compliance or otherwise with the University’s policies and practices regarding requests under the Freedom of Information Act (‘the FOIA’) and the Environmental Information Regulations (‘the EIR’) for the release of data.
4. Review and make recommendations as to the appropriate management, governance and security structures for CRU and the security, integrity and release of the data it holds. (footnote 2)
Submissions
The Committee invites written submissions from interested parties on the three questions set out above by noon on Wednesday 10 February:
Each submission should:
a) be no more than 3,000 words in length
b) be in Word format (no later than 2003) with as little use of colour or logos as possible
c) have numbered paragraphs
d) include a declaration of interests.
A copy of the submission should be sent by e-mail to scitechcom@parliament.uk and marked “Climatic Research Unit”. An additional paper copy should be sent to:
The Clerk
Science and Technology Committee House of Commons
7 Millbank
London SW1P 3JA
It would be helpful, for Data Protection purposes, if individuals submitting written evidence send their contact details separately in a covering letter. You should be aware that there may be circumstances in which the House of Commons will be required to communicate information to third parties on request, in order to comply with its obligations under the Freedom of Information Act 2000.
Please supply a postal address so a copy of the Committee’s report can be sent to you upon publication.
A guide for written submissions to Select Committees may be found on the parliamentary website at: www.parliament.uk/commons/selcom/witguide.htm
Please also note that:
– Material already published elsewhere should not form the basis of a submission, but may be referred to within a proposed memorandum, in which case a hard copy of the published work should be included.
– Memoranda submitted must be kept confidential until published by the Committee, unless publication by the person or organisation submitting it is specifically authorised.
– Once submitted, evidence is the property of the Committee. The Committee normally, though not always, chooses to make public the written evidence it receives, by publishing it on the internet (where it will be searchable), by printing it or by making it available through the Parliamentary Archives. If there is any information you believe to be sensitive you should highlight it and explain what harm you believe would result from its disclosure. The Committee will take this into account in deciding whether to publish or further disclose the evidence.
– Select Committees are unable to investigate individual cases.
Notes to Editors
Media Enquiries: Becky Jones: 020 7219 5693
Committee Website: http://www.parliament.uk/science
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Yes it is criminal that this law, like so many other allegedly well intentioned ones are fatally flawed (the immediate ban on legally held hand-guns in 1997 after the Dunblane massacre was one I recall – gun crime sored after its introduction using illegally held hang-guns instead). However, being a cynical 50+ I suspect that because this law essentially governs public servants, it was always intended that no one gets prosecuted, but is allowed the old revolver in the draw option, & takes early retirement (to spend more time with their family etc) on full taxpayer funded pension so that the status quo is maintained. It will be interesting what changes to the law (if any), actually come about!
On a more positive note, let’s keep the pressure up, the cracks are widening into chasms, let them have both barrels! (Metaphorically speaking of course):-)
CodeTech (00:38:32) :
I agree the Catch 22 defence is to be removed. Also in old boy Law, actions have ramifications some people wont be teaching milk drinking in Kinder gartens.
ICO said: “The legislation requires action within six months of the offence taking place…”
This is not quite what the legislation says. It requires the matter to be put infront of a Magistrate “within 6 months from the time when the offence was committed, or the matter of complaint arose.” The latter means the clock started ticking with the CRU leak when it became clear Mr Holland’s FOI request had not been dealt with correctly. It is preposterous to think that successfully covering up an offence for six months or more would put someone in the clear.
Chris Holland was not the only one to make a FOI request for the CRU data.
I did as well.
The ICO and the FOI Law is a shambles- only yesterday I was on the phone to them about to enquire about this 6 month expiry issue. I was passed from one person to another. No-one was apparently familiar with the FOI Act!
I was eventually asked to put my question about the 6 months expiry issue in writing! (which I have done).
I think I’m pretty sure what the answer will be!
Mike Jonas (00:42:37) : b) be in Word format (no later than 2003)” That nicely eliminates just about everyone.
It’s in the saving, Mike. Word docs can be “saved down” to by-pass any problem at the destination where an older version may be in use. Very useful. “Save as” = quite a number of options.
Wow, this is good! Over at Climaterealist I found this:-
http://climaterealists.com/log_viewing.php?id=4975&type=download&url=%2Fattachments%2Fdatabase%2FVested+interests+scary+as+any+climate+change+scare.pdf
It’s amasing how much we Brits are treated like mushrooms – you all know what I mean!
I’d just like to say to the person who leaked the e-mails and files from CRU (I am sure he or she reads this). Be clear, are you a leaker or a whistleblower? Were you revelaing this information in the public interest? Have you taken advice e.g. from here: http://www.pcaw.co.uk/individuals_pdfs/helpline_questions.pdf
Have you got a lawyer?
I hope that climate sceptics and other citizens concerned with good government might help you defend yourself in court.
Mike,
They might settle for pdf.
Anyway, as Alan the Brit says, we have to keep the pressure on. I wonder if the recent publications on the Climategate mails aren’t having some effect already.
By the way, I wonder when and where Al will be giving his next lecture.
“Mr Holland’s FOI requests were submitted in 2007/8, but it has only recently come to light that they were not dealt with in accordance with the Act….
The legislation requires action within six months of the offence taking place, so by the time the action taken came to light the opportunity to consider a prosecution was long gone.”
I know muggsy, we’ll hide the data for six months…see, and when
the coast is clear…. This is stupid. Mr. Holland’s FOI request has
not been fulfilled and is therefore still valid, so any wrong doing
is ongoing. The law was written to force prosecutors to take action
in a timely manner, not to let criminals wait out some dubious
statute of limitations. I can’t imagine a judge dismissing this and
explaining in his written opinion, the criminal knew just how to get
around the law; ignore it!
Veronica,
The whistleblower/leaker would have no trouble defending his/her case. This person did the world a favour by exposing these highly embarassing e-mails authored by a ring of fraudster ideologues. The whistleblower is a role model for honesty, civil courage and human rights. The person is a hero and would have the support of thousands, if not millions, of people. Only shameless liars, cheaters and political thugs would have an axe to grind w.r.t. this person’s behaviour.
For those who want to hunt the whistleblower down, get a life and live with the fact that the science that’s been peddled is bogus and rubbiish. The scam is over.
Veronica,
The scam is over.
Live with it!
The Prince Charles/CRU story is now available here:
http://www.edp24.co.uk/content/edp24/news/story.aspx?brand=EDPOnline&category=News&tBrand=EDPOnline&tCategory=xDefault&itemid=NOED26%20Jan%202010%2020%3A07%3A45%3A463
Hope this long link works, if not go to:
http://www.edp24.co.uk/content/edp24/default/
and the story is on the front page.
I see brc. So all one has to do is hide and ignore the FOI long enough and it’s easily circumvented. That’s stupid. The only way this is possible is if the government deliberated constructed the rules that way to avoid them being of any use. To me this stinks. I don’t really believe they will change the law as they won’t like it. I’ll believe it when I see it. Yes indeed George Orwell must be laughing his head off by now.
There interpretation could just as easily have reached the opposite conclusion.
It could just as easily be interpreted as a continuous violation regardless of whether the information was obtained through other means. The court would then decide whether the violation is continuous and ongoing or not. This is just a typical way to circumvent an area they don’t wish to pursue.
D. King after reading your post I’ll go back to my original thinking. There is no way the FOI requests can be circumvented so easily simply by ignoring them long enough. As you explained it they must comply or they are in breach of the law. What idiot would construct a law that has a simple 6 month expiry date? Simply not believable. It’s time for action. I suggest we all send reminders to Monckton to see if he can do something about this to get the ball rolling.
As this is about the Sunday Times can I just point out that the Guardian newspaper is using the following image quite a lot.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/gallery/2009/dec/17/week-in-wildlife?picture=357062232
For example here
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/jan/25/climate-aid-uk-funding
With the description “Tree roots in India exposed due to rising sea levels”.
However if you investigate the source of the image you find this Times of India article
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kolkata-/Vanishing-islands-Blame-on-KoPT/articleshow/4352474.cms
Which strongly offers the view that global warming is not to blame, it was written by Achintyarup Ray with quotes from affected islanders.
Achintyarup Ray also has a blog linked below with a lot more background information.
http://sunderbanislands.blogspot.com/
Rats leaving the sinking ship?
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=2488011ship?
The FoI Commission can only do what it is empowered to do. Assessing how well it works within its remit is a different matter. I have had dealings with its Scottish equivalent and found it to be one of the few governmental bodies up here that takes its responsibilities seriously.
Typically, an FoI Commission deals with folk who want information on this or that from a state institution but cannot get it. It rules either that, yes, they must get it or that, no, it does not have to be disclosed. If it’s yes, the paper are handed over, there are some red faces in government and life goes on. The question of prosecution does not arise.
Bureaucrats always want more power. That’s politics. We do not know how common it is to break FoI laws and get caught retrospectively (as alleged here) or whether the issue of prosecution has come up before in a high-profile case. This may be the first opportunity the Commission has had to raise issues it was already aware of.
What it seems effectively to have said is, “There may well have been a breach of the law but we cannot pursue it. “. Jones and colleagues are, rightly, innocent until proven guilty but they have not been cleared.
Two results. First: the evidence that would have been lost for ever to the UEA’s behind-closed-doors “review” will now go into the public domain as a result of the Standing Committee probe. Second: the FoI Commission has declined to clear CRU staff of law-breaking.
It’s not a triumph for CRU critics but it’s not a bad result either. The AGW agenda is becoming a laughing stock faster than anyone dared hope even a month ago. When Russell Muir gives (as he will) his “They’re a lovely bunch of fellows” ruling, no one outside of government and the CRU is going to believe a word of it. The UEA has been out-manoeuvred.
BTW, the press release is confused. It’s not Lord Russell who is heading the “Review”, it’s Sir Russell Muir. You’d hope they’d know that.
Note for non-UK readers: a knighthood (Sir this or that . . .) is a gong routinely awarded to senior civil servants who are not caught stealing the spoons. A peerage (Lord This of That) is a more highly-prized gong routinely awarded to businessmen who fund the party forming the current government.
In that ‘Telegraph’ article, John Beddington, the government’s chief scientific adviser, states:
‘It is unchallengeable that CO2 traps heat and warms the Earth…’
OH, REALLY..???
I was under the impression that any heat-trapping was done by water vapour, in the form of clouds – and in any case, I thought it had also been proven that CO2 increase FOLLOWS increases in the global temperature – and does NOT cause it..!
I may only be a mechanical engineer, Mr Beddington – but I love it when someone says something is ‘unchallengeable’….
I am always concerned when I read articles like this. The FoIA ALWAYS WAS about keeping the rulling/political elite where *they* are and keeping *us* (For those in the UK that is) where *we* are, with the police/forces given extra powers to enforce that.
This will just be a “cleanup”, the law will be adjusted to suit the ruling/political agenda.
@ur momisugly KTWO:
Thanks for your interesting link, but I find Professor Beddington to be dissingenuous. He is calling for more tranparancy and saying that the sceptics might have a point on some issues (namely the rate at which inevitable disaster will strike, and that exagerations deserve scepticism). He fails to acknowledge that the biggest issue with sceptics is actually the question over whether humans can be shown to be causing any measurable climate change at all. He seems to suggest that this is beyond debate, and that rising CO2 automatically equals rising temperature.
So, like I said: disingenuous. But then, he is a Government – I’ll say that again – a *Government* – advisor.
Pete (03:19:30)
Great link from you to story in Times of India, presenting case they exposed tree roots NOT due to rising sea level:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kolkata-/Vanishing-islands-Blame-on-KoPT/articleshow/4352474.cms
The article ends with:
“R K Pachauri, chairman of the Nobel-winning IPCC, said, “It would be inappropriate for me to comment on Lohachara without being fully apprised of the precise factual circumstances surrounding its disappearance.” ”
A bit he wish he applied the same cautious response to Himilayan glaciers!
Fine. Where and what are the historical records that these jokers supposedly have?
This Labour government has introduced some 3120 new Laws since gaining office. I guess 1 more won’t make much difference! We now have laws that allow criminals to seek compensation for being traumatised by angry householders. The CRU will wriggle out of any prosecution whatever happens.
Hopefully this will begin to roll back the influence of Big Government – so typical of Socialist/Communist regimes like the UK Labour government.
We have had:
Politicized science. Politicized police. Politicized education. Politicized banking. Politicized agriculture. Politicized civil service. Politicized social services. Politicized military.
Perhaps if we can end the politicization of science, we can unravel the politicization of all the other social and national departments.
.